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Joined 6 months ago
cake
Cake day: March 9th, 2024

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  • final update:

    • sold out in record time
    • actually was able to raise my price over his due to popularity
    • incalculable profit i made so much money

    walked up to jim slammed $45 on his shoulder and took 4lbs with me. didn’t ask. enjoy the business brother you are not like me

    [Post had a picture of a shotgun, a spilled bag of garlic, the book “Ramillia Quarterly, and a folded hoodie with the text “Hikkikimori Condition”]









  • I’ve never had any issues with the mint live environment, but trying XFCE might be helpful. I would also try booting the computer and waiting until it stops reading from the dvd before doing anything. The live systems gets copied off the dvd, and I can see there being problems if you’re doing things that need data that hasn’t been copied into memory yet.

    It’s also possible your memory could be starting to go. Is the windows installation stable? Some linux installers have a built in option to run a memory test (and some bioses as well) but I can’t remember if Mint does. Memtest86+ is a standalone memory testing program can be flashed to a usb drive or burned to a disk.

    As pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online (On mobile, I think that’s the right person) mentioned, are all the hard drives internal? Do they show up in BIOS? The Mint installer should be able to see them. Before trying to setup all the partitions in GParted, I would try creating a new MBR partition table on the drive you want to use, saving, and rerunning the installer.

    You can still change both order from bios, but most linux boot managers give you the option of booting to a list of operating systems and then choosing the default after a certain number of seconds.